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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> BPC Hotels Ltd v Brooke North (A Firm) [2014] EWHC 2367 (TCC) (06 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/2367.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 2367 (TCC) |
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TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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BPC HOTELS LIMITED | Claimant | |
-v- | ||
BROOKE NORTH (A FIRM) | ||
BROOKE NORTH LLP | Defendants |
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Apple Transcription Limited
Suite 204, Kingfisher Business Centre, Burnley Road, Rawtenstall, Lancashire BB4 8ES
DX: 26258 Rawtenstall – Telephone: 0845 604 5642 – Fax: 01706 870838
Counsel for the Defendants: MR JAMIE SMITH
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE AKENHEAD:
"If the Employer shall make default in any one or more of the following respects:
1.1 he does not pay by the final date for payment the amount properly due to the Contractor in respect of any certificate and/or any VAT on that amount pursuant to the VAT agreement
… the Contractor may give to the Employer the notice specifying the default or defaults (the specified default or defaults)."
"If the Employer continues a specified default or a specified suspension event is continued for 14 days from receipt of the notice under clause 28.2.1, then the Contractor may on or within ten days from the expiry of that 14 days by a further notice to the employer determine the employment of the Contractor under this contract. Such determination shall take effect on the date of receipt of such further notice."
"The main contractor covenants with the beneficiary [that is the bank] that it will not exercise nor seek to exercise any right of determination of its employment under the main contract or to discontinue the performance of any of its obligations in relation to the project by reason of breach on the part of the employer without giving to the beneficiary not less than 21 days' notice of its intention to terminate its employment under the main contract and specifying the grounds for the proposed termination."
"Subject to clause 8.3, the beneficiary shall give notice to the main contractor within the period of not less than 21 days specified in the notice under clause 8.1, 9.1.1 requiring it to continue its obligations under the main contract in relation to the project, and 9.1.2 acknowledging that the beneficiary is assuming all the existing and future obligations of the employer under the main contract; then upon determination of the main contractor's employment under the main contract the provisions of clause 9.2 shall apply."
"Subject to clause 8.3, and in the event that a notice is served in accordance with clause 9.1, notwithstanding determination of the main contractor's employment as specified in clause 9.1 the main contract shall be deemed (as between the main contractor and the beneficiary or the beneficiary's nominee) to continue in full force and effect as if the right of determination on the part of the main contractor had not arisen and in all respects as if the main contract had been made between the main contractor and the beneficiary to the exclusion of the employer whereby:
(a) the beneficiary assumes all the existing and future obligations of the employer under the main contract; and
(b) the main contractor acknowledges all of its obligations under the main contract in favour of the beneficiary."
"The unusual, and in the experience of witnesses in this case unique, feature of the deed of warranty provided by Costain is that, instead of the step in provision conferring a right exercisable only at the option of the bank, it is a mandatory provision, requiring the bank to step in. This was not a mistake. The evidence establishes that Costain was concerned as to the ability of the company to meet its obligations under the building contract. In the company's letter of intent dated 7 September 2000 to Costain, it undertook 'to provide your company [Costain] with suitable financial surety for the Contract'. In the course of negotiations in the autumn of 2000, Costain insisted on the provision of some security for its benefit. The bank was not prepared to agree an escrow account, but it was prepared to agree to a step in obligation as a means of providing security for Costain. Mr Chandra maintained in his evidence that these terms were negotiated between the bank and Costain, without any involvement by the company. I reject this evidence. It is clear from the contemporary documents that the company and its solicitors were closely involved in the negotiations. They were not terms in any way imposed on the company. It is, however, the case that without this or some other form of security Costain would not have committed itself as contractor for the development. The deed of warranty was negotiated in 2000 but, as with the other security, not executed until shortly before the first drawdown in July 2001."
"The bank may under the hand of any official manager or by deed appoint or remove a receiver or receivers of the property and may fix and pay the fees of a receiver, that any receiver should be deemed to be the agent of the company and the company should be solely responsible for the receiver's acts, defaults and remuneration."
"(i) The court must consider whether the claimant has a "realistic" as opposed to a "fanciful" prospect of success: Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91;
(ii) A "realistic" claim is one that carries some degree of conviction. This means a claim that is more than merely arguable: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472;
(iii) In reaching its conclusion the court must not conduct a "mini-trial": Swain v Hillman [2001] 1 All ER 91;
(iv) This does not mean that the court must take at face value and without analysis everything that a claimant says in his statements before the court. In some cases it may be clear that there is no real substance in factual assertions made, particularly if contradicted by contemporaneous documents: ED & F Man Liquid Products v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472;
(v) However, in reaching its conclusion the court must take into account not only the evidence actually placed before it on the application for summary judgment, but also the evidence that can reasonably be expected to be available at trial: Royal Brompton Hospital NHS Trust v Hammond (No 5) [2001] EWCA Civ 550;
(vi) Although a case may turn out at trial not to be really complicated, it does not follow that it should be decided without the fuller investigation into the facts at trial than is possible or permissible on summary judgment."
"20. Mr Chandra telephoned Mr Lopeman [this is on 20 May] and explained the situation including in particular the following:
20.1: The claimant had not yet received the offer of the third finance agreement from RBS, but Mr and Mrs Chandra had been asked to sign the further personal guarantees.
20.2: The claimant did not have sufficient funds to meet the 20 May payments and RBS had informed Mr Chandra that if the claimant did not make the 20 May payments on that day, the claimant would be in breach of the building contract and RBS would appoint an administrative receiver."
"I conclude therefore that as against Mrs Chandra the second guarantee should be set aside."
So it would not have been possible in the light of those findings for her to claim that she had had to pay in effect all or any part of the £450,000 because she was not bound to pay it and she never did pay it as far as I can tell.
"Pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(a) the Chandras' claims for (a) loss of director's earnings and (b) loss of pension contributions, totalling four million pounds exclusive of interest, are struck out because they contravene the prohibition on claiming reflective loss."
"Losses claimed by BPC are 27.186 million and losses claimed by Mr and Mrs Chandra apart from a loss relating to losing their matrimonial home include loss and damage due to their losing their expected employment as the hands on directors in Holiday Inn, two million pounds, and losses relating to the enhanced value of their pension funds as a consequence of losing pension contribution of two million pounds from BPC."
"Where a company suffers loss caused by a breach of duty to it and a shareholder suffers a loss separate and distinct from that suffered by the company caused by breach of a duty independently over the shareholder, each may sue to recover the loss caused to it by breach of duty, but neither may recover loss caused to the other by breach of the duty owed to that other."
MR CHANDRA: No.
THE JUDGE: No. Have you incurred any expense like photocopying—
MR CHANDRA: Yes, I have.
THE JUDGE: —and travel?
MR CHANDRA: I have been incurring losses like that. I haven't kept copies or records of
individual—
THE JUDGE: How did you [travel?], did you come down to London by train this morning?
MR CHANDRA: By train, yes. What I am asking the court to do is to make, the court to do an, [order?] an assessment of how much cost I would have incurred, and I am prepared to accept that.
THE JUDGE: I am not going to stop you making any application on it, but what I was proposing to do, subject to giving Mr Smith the opportunity to come back, was to order that the defendants pay you £500 to cover your train expenses coming down here, your photocopying costs, and I would not have thought that was unfair.
MR CHANDRA: Bit low, I would say.
THE JUDGE: You tell me. The trouble is, I cannot get, I know if you book an early enough return ticket from Manchester, I can work out—
MR CHANDRA: No, we obviously used the cheapest possible transport and so on. I would say that something like £750. It's not just photocopying, it's also transport. Some of the documents have delivered by hand to them as well as to the court.
THE JUDGE: When you say delivered, what, have you delivered them or you have a courier or…?
MR CHANDRA: No, no, by personally.
THE JUDGE: So you had to come down to London.
MR CHANDRA: Yes, yes, but I would be happy to accept £750 if you approve it.
THE JUDGE: Mr Smith?
MR SMITH: I am not sure how seemly it would be for me to start arguing about the difference between those two figures. I think the two things I would just want to say [inaudible] complete [inaudible], my client has very significant costs orders in its favour and arising out of a visit to the Court of Appeal before your lordship became involved. Now we made a submission that they should be assessed and the claimant's response to that was that we do not have any money and so the Court of Appeal simply has made an order that we have our costs. So the only submission I would want to make is that on a cash flow basis, if we are to pay a figure of £750, in a sense there is an unfairness about that. I think that is really all I would want to say about that. And the only other submission I would wish to make is whether your lordship would at all be attracted to an argument on my part that a percentage of our costs of this application should be in case, if at trial we were to prevail on particularly arguments 1 and 3, and so if your lordship for example were to say 50 percent of our costs in case, if we lose, then we will never get them, but if we are right about our arguments then, it is very theoretical, but in theory we would.
THE JUDGE: I think the issue is whether it was appropriate, I am not saying it was not [inaudible], but whether it was appropriate for you to have sought summary judgment by striking out, and your summary costs bill, which I have seen, goes to that, although I can see that some of the work that you and your solicitors would have done would be helpful at the trial.
MR SMITH: My lord, could I just say in relation to that, because I am sure your lordship saw the numbers, that those costs are in fact for the entirety of the claim.
THE JUDGE: No, I had not [seen?] that.
MR SMITH: The point being is that had we been successful, we would have been entitled not just to the [inaudible]—
THE JUDGE: I see, all right.
MR SMITH: So I just would not want your lordship to think that that was the number referable purely to this application.
THE JUDGE: No, I had not seen.
MR SMITH: But beyond that I think I have said what I would wish to say, my lord.
MR CHANDRA: To reply to that, £750, we are talking about this only for this hearing. We have incurred costs from the day we submitted the claim form. They could be running into 60, 70, or even more, thousand, because we did employ solicitors and counsels at the time. We're not planning that now.
THE JUDGE: No, that would follow the events of the trial, if you win.
MR CHANDRA: So I think it appropriate, it's costs in the case, except today's expenditure.
THE JUDGE: All right. I think what I am going to do is to say that apart from the costs of attendance here today, with attendance costs, should be considered as costs in the case, not their costs in the case, but costs in the case. Ditto the claimant's other than today, but the costs of, the claimant's personal costs involved with travelling and photocopying should be borne by the defendant and I am going to order that £600 summarily assessed to cover those, and they should be paid within 14 days by the defendants to the claimant. The reason I am going that is really because this application I have decided broadly against the defendant and in those circumstances and so as not to prevent or limit Mr and Mrs Chandra's and their company's case from proceeding, that expenditure should be paid.
Now, arbitrators. Not arbitrators. Mediators. Most of these, I think, something like that. I have researched Mr [Payne?]. I do not know him personally although I do recognise the face and I may have met him somewhere. He is regarded as being in the top dozen or so of mediators in the country. I have looked at is called the Legal 500, which is not absolutely official but it is regarded as, if you are in the top division if you like. I have absolutely no reason to think that he would in any way be biased against you as such. The other names I have got are Michel Kallipetis, who is probably top five British, very good—
MR CHANDRA: How do you spell it?
THE JUDGE: K-A-L-L-I-P-E-T-I-S. He is a very nice man as well, he is very astute, I guess you could say, but highly experienced mediator. Michael Shane, S-H-A-N-E, he is attached to my old chambers but I think he joined after I left so I have met him. He is actually an American gentleman but he has mediated some very thorny disputes in this country and this might be a quite thorny one. Rosemary Jackson QC at Keating Chambers, not my old chambers, very experienced and successful mediator, and Dr Robert Gaitskell QC, also from Keating, again a highly experienced mediator. So I will not pretend that any of them is bound to be better than any of the others but I would have thought they are all pretty good if you want to go down that route, but have you had some discussions?
MR SMITH: My lord, we have. Can I briefly just deal with one bit of housekeeping?
THE JUDGE: Yes.
MR SMITH: Which is that at this point the amended schedule of loss of the claimants has not been given the permission of the court, and the stance that was set out in my skeleton is that now that we have lost the application, there is no ground of resistance.
THE JUDGE: So permission to serve and to rely on that.
MR SMITH: Yes.
THE JUDGE: Yes.
MR SMITH: And my lord, thinking about it, given that we have not yet responded to it, I do not believe there are any costs thrown away that arise from that. So I will not be seeking anything about that.
THE JUDGE: No.
MR SMITH: Now in relation to discussing matters with Mr and Mrs Chandra, which they kindly gave me the opportunity to do before 2.30, we had sketched out something like this: That in relation to the identity of mediators, whether as it were private professionals or judges, that I have no doubt that the Chandras are very wedded to the idea of a member of the judiciary and the only difficulty that I have is that I was unable to take instructions this afternoon from all the people I would need to. So what we had decided, with your lordship's permission, is that by next Friday, the 6th, we write to the court—
THE JUDGE: No, it is the 6th today.
MR SMITH: Yes, indeed, that we write to the court saying either that we have both reached agreement that—
THE JUDGE: On x.
MR SMITH: Yes, or if not, then we provide the names and then the procedure that I mentioned in the TCC guide would follow.
THE JUDGE: Yes, all right.
MR SMITH: So that was the proposal in relation to that. Now your lordship asked whether I had a copy of the [inaudible] from—
THE JUDGE: Yes, I do, so I have probably seen it [inaudible]. Thank you.
MR SMITH: So turning over the page, disclosure and inspection has now taken place, and at number 6, the deadline according to this order was 20th June for witness statements. The parties did place a consent order before the court extending that to 4th July, but—
THE JUDGE: All right, [inaudible].
MR SMITH: But there is going to be a CMC on 11th July. Now what we have sketched out in the context of that is this, that we would allocate a period up to the end of July for ADR, that we would postpone witness statements until the end of September. We would not at the moment seek to move the trial, and in relation to seeking to reshape the trial itself, my anxiety was that that could be something that would need considerable thought. Your lordship knows as well as anybody, shortcuts can provide pitfalls, and so what the Chandras and I sketched out is that by 27th June we would use our best endeavours to agree proposals and by that date we would either then write with those proposals to the court or to the extent that we had not been able to reach agreement, we would each put forward our own separate proposals. In the case of agreement, subject to the court's agreement to that, we could then vacate the CMC but otherwise the CMC would take place and would be used to consider the proposals.
THE JUDGE: All right. And Mr and Mrs Chandra, you are happy with that?
MR CHANDRA: Yes, yes.
THE JUDGE: I think today's order should say, just in case I am not here on 11th July or whatever, I am expected to be here but in case I am otherwise engaged, that active consideration is to be given by the parties and by the court if necessary to limiting the trial to liability and to causation as opposed to quantum. I do not think, if it is another judge, I do not want there to be any doubt that this was something I raised, because I am concerned in the light of the particulars of loss and the fact there might have to be five experts, whether joint or not, (a) as to whether eight days would be enough, and more importantly (b) as to whether there is sufficient time to get those people on board in time for a hearing in February. But I would not want to push the trial off significantly, I would certainly maybe to April to May, but the [inaudible] want to give you, both sides an opportunity with me here to sit down and see if you can put this one to bed, so to speak. But I think the order should just reflect broadly what I have said, so (a) it will remind me and you, and it is not going to be said, this is being raised for the first time and so [inaudible] date. All right.
MR CHANDRA: Can I raise one point on here? If you could include court privilege, sorry, court permission to meet the issue, the amended schedule?
THE JUDGE: Yes, I think Mr Smith will have noted that.
MR CHANDRA: Right.
THE JUDGE: He will probably draw the order up and say something to the effect that the claimant is granted permission to serve and rely upon. It does not mean you have to serve again, but the document of March.
MR SMITH: Yes, no problem.
MR CHANDRA: Okay.
THE JUDGE: Good. Anything else?
MR SMITH: My lord, no.
THE JUDGE: All right, I will keep the papers I suppose. They are getting bigger and bigger. Anyway, thank you very much. Do bear in mind, please, both sides, obviously I think the defendant has already said that as far as they are concerned, every penny of costs they spend is money they are never going to recover from you, even if they win the case, and also I think you, Mr and Mrs Chandra, and I am sure the mediator will say this to you, you need to have some regard to the sort of difficulties that I have highlighted at the end of my judgment today. I am not saying, because do not know who is going to win or lose on negligence, I have made some comments about causation and there are bound to be some difficulties. It might be overcome, and actually looked at from here at the moment this is a case which is crying out to settle, but I think it may be that expectation should at least not be in the eight figure category, but I will say no more than that. I am not saying it is worth nine million or one million or whatever, or 9.999, I am not saying it is worth even as much as a million, but all I am saying is that you may be able to get sufficient to get your lives together, it may not be anything like what you are claiming, but you are out of it, at least it avoids the risk that you do not get a penny. All right, good. Thank you very much indeed. Mr Smith, if your solicitors were to get a transcript, could you please have it sent through to me, just as a matter of interest?
MR SMITH: Yes, my lord.
MR CHANDRA: Sorry, just one point.
THE JUDGE: Yes.
MR CHANDRA: Regard to the cost of mediation.
THE JUDGE: I am not going to make an order as to who should pay for it but I think it is a good idea.
MR CHANDRA: Yes.
THE JUDGE: And it may be, I will leave that up to you and the defendants to work out—
MR CHANDRA: Yes, if it's a judge it won't be, it won't be as much as…
THE JUDGE: What you might do is offer, in lieu of getting your £600 from today, at least that might be your contribution towards it. That sort of thing might help. That is all. So there are ways of maybe reaching an element of compromise. I do not know what mediators are coming at these days but that is a discussion you need to have off the record with the defendants' counsel and solicitors. All right.
MR CHANDRA: Okay, thank you.
THE JUDGE: Thank you very much.